U.S. healthcare plan suffers a Senate delay

Posted by sothea Friday, July 31, 2009


By Donna Smith and Kim Dixon

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama's drive for U.S. healthcare reform suffered another setback on Thursday when Senate Finance Committee leaders said the panel would not vote on a compromise plan before senators leave for a month-long August recess next week.

Committee Chairman Max Baucus said there had not been sufficient progress to complete the healthcare bill by the end of next week but talks between three Democrats and three Republicans on the panel would continue.

"It is clear there will not be a markup next week," Baucus told reporters after another in a long series of closed-door sessions between the committee's six negotiators.

With polls showing public support for Obama's healthcare reform plans waning, the Senate delay was another dose of bad news for his hopes to gain approval for a bill that will lower healthcare costs and expand coverage to the uninsured.

"The bill is not ready for prime time," Republican Senator Michael Enzi, one of the party's three negotiators, told reporters.

The delay could increase pressure on Baucus and Senate Democratic leaders to jettison the bipartisan talks and move forward without Republican support.

"We are committed to finding a bipartisan solution as expeditiously as possible," Baucus said after acknowledging there would not be a panel vote until September.

Senator Charles Grassley, the ranking Republican on the panel, told reporters: "We have not been committed to deadlines, we are committed to getting the job done."

In the House of Representatives, the Energy and Commerce Committee -- the last of three House panels to vote on healthcare reform -- began debate after striking a deal with conservative Democrats.

The panel spent much of Thursday wading through dozens of amendments to the measure. Final approval could come Friday.

'COMMON GROUND'

"There's plenty of common ground as we go forward on this," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters. "At the end of the day we have to have universal, quality affordable healthcare for all Americans. And we will do that."

The healthcare overhaul, Obama's top legislative priority in his first year, has been besieged by criticism about its cost and scope. Obama has stepped up his lobbying for passage of a measure to rein in costs, improve care and cover most of the 46 million uninsured Americans.

But as congressional discussions drag on, more Americans are voicing doubt over the reform plan, with many worried that a costly overhaul could reduce the quality of their care and limit choices of doctors.

A New York Times/CBS News poll showed 69 percent of Americans were concerned their care would suffer if they were on a government-run plan.

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